I figure the best place to learn Japanese is in Japan. The fact that I've always wanted to go there is a bonus. The only problem is I know virtually no Japanese or even how much I should know before leaving. If anyone could tell me the minimum I need to get by or maybe point me in the direction of a good language school I'd greatly appreciate it.

I would definately know hira and kata backwards and forwards before leaving. Also a lot of basic kanji (probably 200) would get you through the day without too many headaches. And, if you know what area you'll be in, learn the kanji for the cities in your area--that'll be a big help if you have to travel on the trains and things.

Uhm... but, grammar-wise, I don't know if I could say "how much" is good to know... being able to express yourself in a very basic sense...? I would just start learning and get as much done as you can before going... >_>

A language school in Japan, you mean? I've only heard of the Meguro Language Center (http://www.mlcjapanese.co.jp/) which is in Tokyo. I've never attended, just use their online resources.

I DID attend a Michigan State U-affiliated school in Hikone, Shiga, Japan... but if you aren't a university student able to study abroad, then it's probably not for you. Here's info anyway, though (cuz I could be wrong about them not accepting non-college students).
JCMU

Last edited by Kates on Fri 07.07.2006 11:28 am, edited 1 time in total.

There are many "immersion" programs in Japan run by both private schools and universities. For example, ICU, Sophia, Temple, and Takushoku Universities all have year-long programs that are essentially five days a week, four to six hours in-class Japanese language programs. You'll be pretty fluent at the end of one of those.

If you plan on going to one of those private language schools, keep in mind that you'll need around $20,000 USD to pay for school, and also to keep you afloat while you're there to study. You can work for around 20 hours a week on a student visa (once you've been there for three months and have acceptable grades), but before they'll hand you over a visa in the first place, they want to make sure that you won't become a burden during your stay due to lack of money.

For a normal (restaraunt) job, you'd have to compete with Japanese high schoolers who speak Japanese fluently. My friends from school all managed to find jobs, but they also went through a lot of rejection simply because they are foreigners.

So really teaching English is the best bet, but that can take some time to get started. And, something people seem to overlook a lot, you have to actually understand WHY English works the way it does. If you don't speak Japanese very well, you will be stuck with advanced students who will ask difficult questions but won't understand difficult answers.

If you don't speak Japanese very well, you will be stuck with advanced students who will ask difficult questions but won't understand difficult answers.

even if you know japanese well, some advanced students still are diffucult. i think this is because they like to be difficult.. to question the sensei who cannot answer. i used to get that alot.. until i asked a few questions in japanese they could not answer, that pertty much squared up who was the sensei and who was the student.

two_heads_talking wrote:even if you know japanese well, some advanced students still are diffucult.

But if you know Japanese, you get all the beginner students because there is a shortage of teachers who can speak Japanese. I always thought that was kind of wierd: I devoted a major chunk of my life to learning Japanese, hoping it would further my career, and it just made my job more basic! Usually the more teachers learn, the more advanced material they are allowed to teach. The more I learn, the more I get stuck teaching the easy stuff!